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Secretary General of Nato, Jens Stoltenberg. PA

Nato poised to sign off on accession for Sweden and Finland

The move will further increase Russia’s strategic isolation in the wake of its invasion of neighbouring Ukraine.

THE 30 NATO allies are set to sign off on the accession protocols for Sweden and Finland, sending the membership bids of the two nations to the alliance capitals for legislative approvals.

The move will further increase Russia’s strategic isolation in the wake of its invasion of neighbouring Ukraine in February and military struggles there since.

The 30 ambassadors and permanent representatives are to formally approve the decisions of last week’s Nato summit, when the alliance made the historic decision to invite Russia’s neighbour Finland and Scandinavian partner Sweden to join the military club.

Despite the agreement in the alliance, parliamentary approval in member state Turkey could still pose problems for their final inclusion as members.

Last week, Turkish leader Recep Tayyip Erdogan warned that Ankara could still block the process if the two countries fail to fully meet Turkey’s demand to extradite terror suspects with links to outlawed Kurdish groups or the network of an exiled cleric accused of a failed 2016 coup in Turkey.

He said Turkey’s Parliament could refuse to ratify the deal.

It is a potent threat since Nato accession must be formally approved by all 30 member states, which gives each a blocking right.

Today’s expected signing-off does bring both nations deeper into Nato’s fold already.

As close partners, they have already attended some meetings that involved issues that immediately affected them.

As official invitees, they can attend all meetings of the ambassadors even if they do not yet have any voting rights.

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    Mute Louis O'Dwyer
    Favourite Louis O'Dwyer
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    Jul 5th 2022, 12:40 PM

    Time to kick out Turkey

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    Mute Eoin Roche
    Favourite Eoin Roche
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    Jul 5th 2022, 1:07 PM

    @Louis O’Dwyer: Unfortunately, the wits that drew up the North Atlantic Treaty didn’t include a clause to suspend or expel a member. It could be done, functionally, by simply excluding Turkey from policy and activity. But, Turkey is pretty powerful militarily and occupies one of the most strategic locations in the northern Hemisphere. The last thing anyone needs is for Erdoğan to be driven into the arms of Putin, or it could be curtains for Ukraine, Moldova, Bulgaria, Romania, maybe even Greece. Keep your friends close, but your enemies closer. Besides, inflation is running at 80% in Turkey right now, among other trouble. Its primed for a popular revolution against Erdoğan.

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