Ankara ratifies Sweden’s accession to Nato


The Turkish parliament on Tuesday voted clearly in favour of Sweden joining Nato. For eighteen months Turkey opposed the move, after also blocking Finland’s membership for a long time. Once President Erdoğan has signed, only Hungary’s approval will still be pending. What does this mean for the three countries — and the transatlantic alliance?


Frankfurter Rundschau (DE) /

Everyone benefits except Putin

The Frankfurter Rundschau heaves a sigh of relief:

“The deal brings Turkey closer to its western allies and stabilises Nato’s south-eastern flank. In the north-east, protection is boosted not only for the Scandinavian states, but people in the neighbouring Baltic states can also feel safer. The loser is the Russian autocrat Vladimir Putin. Originally his goal was to keep Nato away from his country. But since the Russian invasion of Ukraine which violated international law, the defence alliance has moved very close to Russia with Finland’s accession, and now there is a long joint border.”

Andreas Schwarzkopf
Dagens Nyheter (SE) /

Extremely unreliable

Turkey has damaged the alliance by delaying its approval for so long, according to Dagens Nyheter:

“During the two-year Sweden drama Turkey conveyed the impression that Nato is not a community at all for the Turkish regime, but merely a tool. During the Ukraine war, the country’s economic relations with Russia have flourished both legally and illegally. Turkey under the AKP maintains friendly relations with Hamas, good relations with Iran and Russia and frosty relations with Nato and the EU. ... If the alliance comes into conflict with Russia, Iran or another friend of Turkey, will Ankara act in accordance with Article 5 of Nato or will it follow its own interests?”

Shachar Nathan
Népszava (HU) /

Illiberal friendships unproductive

Népszava finds it embarrassing that Hungary is still withholding its approval:

“This time our great ‘friend’ Erdoğan has stabbed Viktor Orbán in the back. ... The parliamentary vote in Ankara must have come like a bolt from the blue for the normally so self-assured Hungarian diplomats. It discredited Budapest in the eyes of the Swedish government, because our officials had repeatedly explained that we would make the decision before Ankara. ... The Hungarian government is not even important to the supposed allies. That’s what you get for cosying up to illiberal politicians. We have lost everything: our credibility, our honour, our Western partners and the friends we never had.”

Tamás Rónay
Aftonbladet (SE) /

Sweden must arm itself

Stockholm must invest much more consistently in defence, Aftonbladet demands:

“Sweden should have begun a comprehensive modernisation of its military and civil defence long ago. It simply doesn’t add up for the government to warn of war while at the same time postponing the two percent of GDP defence spending target until 2028. ... Just as putting off the development of the army and navy to some point in the distant future doesn’t make sense either. With all due respect for Nato membership, we must nonetheless be in a position to defend ourselves. That is not possible with the planning that is on the table right now.”

Anders Lindberg