NATO member blocks Sweden and Finland's accession talks – media

18 May, 2022 13:10 / Updated 3 years ago
Turkey has opposed the Nordic states’ membership of the US-led bloc, accusing them of supporting terrorist groups

Turkey has blocked NATO accession talks with Finland and Sweden, several media outlets reported on Wednesday. It came as representatives of the military bloc’s member states gathered seeking to open the negotiations just hours after both nations officially submitted their applications. However, Ankara has reportedly stopped the vote at the start of the talks.

Earlier, NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg had said that the first stage of negotiations on the two countries' applications could be concluded within one or two weeks. However, Turkey’s resistance casts doubt on whether this is still possible.

A spokesman for the organization has not commented on the alleged stumbling block in the talks, but was cited in the Financial Times as saying that “the security interest of all allies have to be taken into account [and] we are determined to work through all issues and reach a rapid conclusion.” At the same time, the spokesman has maintained that Sweden and Finland are NATO’s “closest partners,” adding that their accession “would strengthen Euro-Atlantic security.”

According to the German dpa news agency, Ankara has raised some “security concerns” and said it cannot agree to the start of the talks right away. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has slammed other NATO members for failing to respect Turkey’s “sensitivities” in this issue. He has also accused Stockholm and Helsinki of harboring “terrorists” on their soil.

“We asked for 30 terrorists. They said: ‘We are not giving them’,” Erdogan told the Turkish parliament on Wednesday. “You won’t hand over terrorists but you want to join NATO. We cannot say ‘Yes’ to a security organization that is devoid of security,” the president added.