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NATO chief to push Sweden, Finland membership bids during Turkey visit

NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg

NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg (C) embraces Finnish Foreign Minister Pekka Haavisto (L) and Swedish Ministry for Foreign Affairs Ann Linde after the signing of the accession protocols of Finland and Sweden at the NATO headquarters in Brussels on July 5, 2022. The process to ratify Sweden and Finland as the newest members of NATO was formally launched on July 5, 2022, the military alliance's chief Jens Stoltenberg said, marking a historic step brought on by Russia's war in Ukraine. Kenzo TRIBOUILLARD / AFP

NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said Wednesday he would push Turkey on ratifying Sweden and Finland’s bids to join the Western alliance during an upcoming visit to offer support after devastating earthquakes struck the country last week, Agence France-Presse reported.

He is set to fly to Ankara on Thursday and also head to the region devastated by the earthquakes.

Turkey’s NATO counterparts have been pleading with Ankara to sign off on Sweden and Finland’s stalled bid to become members.

Parliaments in all 30 members of the military alliance must formally ratify Finland and Sweden before they can be admitted. Turkey and Hungary are the only two NATO members not to have done so.

Ankara has suggested it could greenlight Finland’s bid without accepting Nordic neighbor Sweden into the alliance.

Stoltenberg said the ball was in Turkey’s court to move forward with the process.

“It is for Turkey to decide whether they ratify both, and I have recommended that,” Stoltenberg said.

“The sequencing is not the most important thing. The most important thing is that both Finland and Sweden soon become members of the alliance, and I’ll push hard for that.”

Finland, which shares a long border with Russia, and Sweden dropped decades of military non-alignment and applied to join NATO in May last year in response to Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine.

Turkey has been upset by Sweden’s refusal to extradite dozens of suspects that Ankara links to outlawed Kurdish militants and a failed 2016 coup attempt.

Ankara reacted with anger to a decision by the Swedish police to allow a protest at which a far-right extremist burned a copy of the Koran outside the Turkish embassy in Stockholm last month.

Diplomats at NATO are still hopeful that Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan could wave through the ratifications if he secures re-election in the elections in May.

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