Turkish foreign minister told Sweden their Nato bid will be ratified ‘within weeks’ – Europe live | Nato

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Turkey told Sweden it expects Nato bid ratification ‘within weeks’, Swedish minister says

Tobias Billström, Sweden’s foreign minister, told reporters this morning that “it is high time to get the ratification done by both Türkiye and also by Hungary of course, and this was a clear message sent by the foreign ministers”.

For months, Turkey and Hungary have delayed ratification of Sweden’s Nato membership, fuelling frustration within the military alliance.

Speaking as Nato ministers meet in Brussels, Billström said:

We have a very dangerous moment in time for Europe and for the world – and for Nato as an organisation. With the security deteriorating and also with the war in Ukraine, Sweden’s membership in Nato is very important for the organisation.

Billström said he met his Turkish counterpart Hakan Fidan yesterday.

He told me that he expected the ratification to take place within weeks. And of course, we don’t take anything for granted from the side of Sweden, but we look forward to this being completed.

And no new conditions were put forward in this conversation, there were no new demands from the Turkish government, so we look [at] our part as being fulfilled.

The Swedish minister also said that Hungary’s foreign minister, Péter Szijjártó, has repeated that Hungary will not be the last to ratify.

Billström added:

That means that it is more in the hands of Ankara than maybe of Budapest. We expect white smoke from Budapest the moment there is white smoke from Ankara, to put it very bluntly.

The Turkish foreign minister Hakan Fidan (right) speaks with his Swedish counterpart, Tobias Billström (left), before the Nato foreign ministers’ meeting in Brussels
The Turkish foreign minister Hakan Fidan (right) speaks with his Swedish counterpart, Tobias Billström (left), before the Nato foreign ministers’ meeting in Brussels, Belgium, on Tuesday. Photograph: Reuters

Key events

Addressing media reports that Poland plans to send troops to Finland’s border with Russia, the Kremlin said today that such a move could stoke tensions, Reuters reported.

Moscow would see it as a threat, the Kremlin said.

Pressure is mounting for Turkey to sign off on Sweden’s Nato membership bid. Yesterday, the US secretary of state, Antony Blinken, discussed the matter with his Turkish counterpart, Hakan Fidan.

This morning, the US embassy in Stockholm wrote on social media: “We look forward to Sweden becoming a Nato ally as soon as possible.”

Turkey told Sweden it expects Nato bid ratification ‘within weeks’, Swedish minister says

Tobias Billström, Sweden’s foreign minister, told reporters this morning that “it is high time to get the ratification done by both Türkiye and also by Hungary of course, and this was a clear message sent by the foreign ministers”.

For months, Turkey and Hungary have delayed ratification of Sweden’s Nato membership, fuelling frustration within the military alliance.

Speaking as Nato ministers meet in Brussels, Billström said:

We have a very dangerous moment in time for Europe and for the world – and for Nato as an organisation. With the security deteriorating and also with the war in Ukraine, Sweden’s membership in Nato is very important for the organisation.

Billström said he met his Turkish counterpart Hakan Fidan yesterday.

He told me that he expected the ratification to take place within weeks. And of course, we don’t take anything for granted from the side of Sweden, but we look forward to this being completed.

And no new conditions were put forward in this conversation, there were no new demands from the Turkish government, so we look [at] our part as being fulfilled.

The Swedish minister also said that Hungary’s foreign minister, Péter Szijjártó, has repeated that Hungary will not be the last to ratify.

Billström added:

That means that it is more in the hands of Ankara than maybe of Budapest. We expect white smoke from Budapest the moment there is white smoke from Ankara, to put it very bluntly.

The Turkish foreign minister Hakan Fidan (right) speaks with his Swedish counterpart, Tobias Billström (left), before the Nato foreign ministers’ meeting in Brussels
The Turkish foreign minister Hakan Fidan (right) speaks with his Swedish counterpart, Tobias Billström (left), before the Nato foreign ministers’ meeting in Brussels, Belgium, on Tuesday. Photograph: Reuters

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