The government of Finland announced Sunday that it is planning to apply for NATO membership in a move that is likely to irk Moscow amid the months-long conflict in Ukraine.
Ahead of the planned announcement, Russian officials lodged threats against the Scandinavian country, which shares a lengthy border with Russia and has long held a position of neutrality. During the Cold War, both Finland and neighboring Sweden kept out of NATO, but the governments of both countries have said they have reconsidered their stance on the military alliance amid the RussiaโUkraine war.
โWe hope that the Parliament will confirm the decision to apply for NATO membership during the coming days,โ Finnish Prime Minister Sanna Marin said during a news conference in Helsinki on Sunday. โIt will be based on a strong mandate, with the President of the Republic. We have been in close contact with governments of NATO member states and NATO itself.โ
While Finland is a close partner with NATO, Sundayโs announcement โis a historic decision that we will join NATO and hopefully we are making the decisions together,โ Marin added.
Finland, however, appears to have some roadblocks ahead in joining the 28-member alliance. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said his country could oppose the bids of Finland and Sweden, saying that both countries are โguesthouses for terrorist organizationsโ in an apparent reference to the Marxist Kurdistan Workersโ Party (PKK) and the Revolutionary Peopleโs Liberation Front, organizations that have been involved in terrorist campaigns against Turkey since the 1980s.
โThere absolutely needs to be security guarantees here. They need to stop supporting terrorist organizations,โ Turkeyโs foreign minister, Mevlut Cavusoglu, told Turkish reporters in Berlin. He added that Swedish and Finnish bans on exporting some of their defense sector goods to Turkey must end.
โOur stance is perfectly open and clear. This is not a threat, this is not a negotiation where weโre trying to leverage our interests,โ he said.ย โThis is not populism either. This is clearly about two potential member statesโ support for terrorism, and our solid observations about it, this is what we shared.โ
On Thurday, meanwhile, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters that it would โdefinitelyโ be a threat to Russiaโs sovereignty if Finland joined NATO.ย โAs we have said many times before, NATO expansion does not make the world more stable and secure,โ Peskov said.
Byย Jack Phillips