“A joint membership in the Alliance remains the ‘first choice’,” said the Finnish Foreign Minister in different interviews
Finland should consider the option of joining NATO without Swedensaid today for the first time, according to Agence France-Presse, the Finnish foreign minister in his statements on his country’s public television after Turkish President Erdogan ruled out the possibility of Ankara giving the green light to the Swedish candidacy.
However, in another telephone interview with Reuters, he said that Finland and Sweden have repeatedly said they plan to join NATO at the same time and that has not changed, underscoring the advantages of joint membership with the neighboring country.
“I don’t see the reason to discuss it,” he characteristically replied when asked if Finland might proceed with membership without Sweden.
But in comments he made on Yle public television, according to Agence France-Presse, Pekka Haavisto said that a joint membership of the two Nordic countries remains “the first option” but “obviously we will have to assess the situation, if something has happened that in the long run it makes Sweden no longer able to move forward’ and judged that it is ‘too early to take a position’.
The head of Finnish diplomacy has ruled that a break is needed in the talks between the two Nordic countries and Turkey regarding their accession plans.
The Turkish president said on Monday that Sweden should not expect his country’s support for NATO membership after a demonstration near the Turkish embassy in Stockholm at the weekend in which a copy of the Koran was burned.
These protests are an “obstacle” to NATO bids and the “protesters are playing with the security of Finland and Sweden. My conclusion is that there will be a delay (for the Turkish green light), which will certainly last until the Turkish elections in mid-May,” he concluded.
“We need a break before we go back to the trilateral talks and see where we are and things calm down after the current situation, so no conclusions should be drawn yet,” Haavisto told Reuters in a telephone interview.
“I think there will be a break for a couple of weeks,” he estimated.
Haavisto said he had talks with his Turkish counterpart Mevlut Cavusoglu yesterday, Monday.
“They are clearly feeling the pressure from the upcoming elections in mid-May and because of this the dialogue has understandably become intense in many ways in Turkey.”
Sweden and Finland applied last year to join NATO after Russia invaded Ukraine.
They need the agreement of all NATO members to proceed with their request.
But one NATO member, Turkey, has said that Sweden in particular should take a stand against what Ankara considers terrorists — mainly Kurdish fighters and a group it blames for a 2016 coup attempt in Turkey.
Unlike in the case of Sweden, Turkey has made it clear in recent months that it would have no significant objection to Finland’s entry.
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