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Finland, Sweden and Turkey meet this Wednesday to unblock NATO enlargement

MADRID, 24 May. (EUROPA PRESS) –

The governments of Finland and Sweden will send delegations to Turkey on Wednesday in the hope of smoothing over the “concerns” publicly expressed by the Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and that hamper the potential access to NATO of the two Nordic countries.

This was announced on Tuesday by the Finnish Foreign Minister, Pekka Haavisto, who referred during an appearance at the World Economic Forum in Davos (Switzerland) to the “problems” that arose in the accession process.

The Government of Turkey has also confirmed the meeting, which will be attended by Oscar Stenstrom on behalf of Sweden and Jukka Salovaara, Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, both Secretaries of State, on behalf of Finland. The Turkish delegation will be headed by the spokesman for the Presidency, Ibrahim Kalin, and the Deputy Foreign Minister, Sedat Onal, according to a statement.

Sweden and Finland submitted their request to join the Atlantic Alliance on Wednesday of last week, but the need for consensus among the 30 member states has not allowed formal negotiations to begin for now.

Haavisto has indicated that they will work to resolve Turkish doubts, some of them referring to the alleged permissiveness of Sweden and Finland towards groups considered “terrorists”. However, the Finnish Foreign Minister has also pointed out that not all the complaints raised by Erdogan correspond exclusively to Helsinki or Stockholm.

The head of Finnish diplomacy has thanked that the reaction to the request for accession has been “very positive” by the vast majority of countries and has recognized that some of them – including the United States – have already provided “security guarantees ” in this interim period until full incorporation into NATO.

Likewise, it has once again justified Finland’s change of criteria, which until now had always been reluctant to enter the Atlantic Alliance, referring mainly to the military offensive launched by Russia in Ukraine in February.

Russia is increasingly “unpredictable”, in the opinion of Haavisto, who has warned of the risk of chemical or nuclear weapons being used and of the escalation of indiscriminate abuses attributed to Russian forces on Ukrainian territory.

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