World

Turkey Approves Finland’s NATO Application

Turkey’s parliament has approved a bill to allow Finland to join NATO.

Gatekeepers News reports that following the clearance of the last major hurdle for Helsinki to join the defence alliance, the Nation will become the 31st member of NATO.

Before voting to approve its application, Turkey had delayed Finland’s bid to join the West’s defensive alliance for months – complaining the Nordic nation was supporting “terrorists”.

Meanwhile, Sweden, which applied to join NATO at the same time last May, is still being blocked by Ankara over similar complaints.

Any NATO expansion needs the support of all its members.

Finland will now be formally admitted into NATO at its next summit, taking place in July in Lithuania.

The Finnish government in a statement following the Turkish vote, said joining the alliance would strengthen the country’s security, and improve stability and security in the region.

Prime Minister Sanna Marin wrote on Twitter, “As allies, we will give and receive security. We will defend each other. Finland stands with Sweden now and in the future and supports its application.”

Earlier this month, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan gave his approval to Finland’s bid, praising the country’s “authentic and concrete steps” on Turkish security.

Nevertheless, his ongoing hostility to Sweden was clear – as he again accused the country of embracing Kurdish militants and allowing them to demonstrate on the streets of Stockholm.

Ankara’s decision to ratify Finland’s membership clears the way for one of the most important moments in NATO’s recent history.

Finland, a country with a 1,340km (832 mile) border with Russia and one of the most powerful arsenals of artillery pieces in Western Europe, is ditching its neutrality and joining the alliance in response to Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

Also, Sweden abandoned a longstanding commitment to neutrality in applying to join NATO, but unlike its neighbour it does not share a border with Russia.

One of NATO’s founding principles is the principle of collective defence – meaning an attack on one member nation is treated as an attack on them all.

For Russian President Vladimir Putin, Finland’s accession is a major strategic setback.

He sent his army into Ukraine last year in the expectation it would check NATO’s expansion and weaken the West. In fact, it has achieved the exact opposite.

Finland is now set to become the seventh Nato country on the Baltic Sea, further isolating Russia’s coastal access at St Petersburg and on its small exclave of Kaliningrad.

Russia’s foreign ministry earlier condemned Finland’s decision, saying it was ill-considered and based on Russophobic hysteria.

Remi Ibikunle

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