Turkiye parliament approves Sweden's Nato bid

Turkiye parliament approves Sweden's Nato bid

World

Turkiye endorsed Finland’s membership bid in April but, along with Hungary, kept Sweden waiting

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(Web Desk) – Turkiye’s parliament has approved Sweden’s Nato membership bid after more than four hours of debates.

The legislators ratified Sweden’s accession protocol by 287 votes to 55, with four abstentions on Tuesday.
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is expected to sign the bill into law in the coming days, ending the 20-month-long delay that has frustrated some of Ankara’s Western allies.

Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson said after the vote that Stockholm was “one step closer” to joining the alliance.

“Positive that the Grand General Assembly of Turkiye has voted in favour of Sweden’s NATO accession,” he wrote on social media platform X.
Turkiye’s ratification leaves Hungary as the last holdout in an accession process that Sweden and its neighbour Finland began in response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine nearly two years ago.

Hungary’s Prime Minister Viktor Orban said on Tuesday he had invited Kristersson, for a visit to negotiate his country joining the military alliance.

Finland became the 31st member of the alliance last April. Its membership roughly doubled the length of Nato’s border with Russia and substantially strengthened the defences of three small Baltic nations that joined the bloc following the Soviet Union’s collapse.

Sweden and Finland pursued a policy of military non-alignment during the Cold War-era confrontation between Russia and the United States.

However, Russia’s bloody invasion of its western neighbour upturned geopolitical calculations.

Erdogan’s resistance to Sweden’s NATO accession reflected his more nuanced stance towards Moscow.

Ankara has profited from maintaining – and even expanding – trade with Russia while at the same time supplying Ukraine with drones and other essential arms.

Erdogan has also been one of the few NATO leaders to hold regular meetings and phone conversations with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Turkish media reported that Putin could make his first wartime visit to Turkey next month.