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Turkiye's talks with Sweden, Finland made little progress on NATO concerns, say sources

May 27, 2022 at 2:24 pm

Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu attends NATO Foreign Ministers informal meeting in Berlin, Germany on May 15, 2022 [Cem Özdel – Anadolu Agency]

Talks between Turkish officials and delegations from Sweden and Finland this week in Turkiye made little headway overcoming Ankara’s objections to the Nordic countries joining NATO, and it is not yet clear when further discussions will take place, according to two sources, Reuters reports.

“It is not an easy process,” a senior Turkish official told Reuters on Friday. “They need to take concrete steps that will be difficult. Further negotiations will continue. But a date doesn’t seem very close.”

Finland and Sweden formally applied to join NATO last week to boost their security in the face of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

All 30 NATO members must approve enlargement plans. But Turkiye challenged the move, saying the Nordic countries harbour people linked to what it calls terrorist groups, and because they have halted arms exports to Ankara. Turkish Foreign Minister, Mevlut Cavusoglu, said on Friday that his country expects Sweden and Finland to take concrete action and halt such support before it lifts its objections.

Sweden: PM says talks with Turkey over NATO bid ‘will take time’

A separate person close to the situation said the Wednesday talks made no clear progress and ended with no timeline to continue, raising the prospect that Turkiye may still oppose the membership bids when NATO holds a summit on 29-30 June in Madrid.

The Swedish and Finnish foreign ministries did not immediately reply to requests for comment on Friday.

The five-hour discussions were cordial and included separate sessions between Turkish officials and counterparts from the two Nordic countries, followed by three-way talks with all parties, the second source added.

A third source told Reuters that Turkish officials downplayed prospects of reaching an agreement before the Madrid summit.