Sweden and Finland’s path to NATO membership has become longer and more demanding than anyone had imagined.
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Our Nordic neighbors thought they could use the fast-track entrance to NATO. With good reason. NATO has an open door for new candidate countries. Sweden and Finland meet all membership requirements. Beforehand, there were no objections from any of the 30 member countries.
Until Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan saw that this was an opportunity to gain concessions and a political gain.
It should not come as a surprise. Erdogan has used the same tactics many times before and put NATO’s cooperation to the test.
Now NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg is trying to untangle them. He was in Finland this weekend and in Sweden on Monday. Intense diplomacy is underway, while hopes are fading that Sweden and Finland will be given the green light before the NATO summit at the end of June.
– The goal is for it to happen as soon as possible, Stoltenberg said after the meeting with Swedish Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson.
On March 17, Stoltenberg said in an interview with Dagens Nyheter that he judged it so that all 30 countries would support Finnish and Swedish membership. The optimism was great. This should be fixed quickly.
But Erdogan stepped on the brake and everything stopped. Now it must be cleaned up “as soon as possible”. It is not possible to set a timeline, and the summit in Madrid is at least no longer a deadline. In the Spanish capital, Erdogan can get all the attention he seeks for his many demands on Sweden, Finland and allies.
More unexpected was that the Swedish opposition, albeit unintentionally, gave Erdogan a helping hand. This happened when a government crisis was recently created, which led to a sharp focus on Sweden’s relations with Kurdish organizations.
It was both unnecessary and irresponsible.
Unnecessary because there are less than 100 days until voters can have their say in the election to the new Riksdag. Irresponsible because the country could have been thrown into chaos at a time when the need for political stability is all the greater.
The government crisis was not really about NATO, Turkey or the Kurds, but about gang crime in Sweden. But since the entire bourgeois opposition supported the Sweden Democrats’ no-confidence motion against Minister of Justice Morgan Johansson, the Social Democratic Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson became dependent on the support of one woman on the sidelines:
The independent representative, Swedish-Kurdish, Amineh Kakabaveh.