By LOLITA C. BALDOR
April 19, 2023
Secretary of Defense, Lloyd J. Austin III, and Sweden's
Minister for Defence, Pål Jonson, hold a joint press conference at the Muskö
Naval Base, in Stockholm, Sweden, Wednesday, April 19, 2023. (Fredrik
Sandberg/TT News Agency via AP)
MUSKO NAVAL BASE, Sweden (AP) — U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd
Austin said Wednesday it’s important that Turkey makes its decision to allow
Sweden to join NATO “sooner versus later” and he “feels confident” it will
happen before the alliance summit in July.
Speaking during a stop in Sweden, Austin declined, however,
to say whether a recent
U.S. deal to provide fighter jet upgrades to Turkey will provide
enough incentive for Ankara to finally vote.
Standing alongside Austin, Swedish Defense Minister Pål
Jonson told reporters he is hopeful Sweden will gain admittance by summer. He
thanked Austin for America’s military support “during this transition time into
NATO,” which he said has reassured Sweden and helped make the country more
secure.
“We look forward to continuing to advocate for your swift
admission to NATO, and we’ll work hard to get that done before the summit,”
Austin said. The NATO summit will be in Lithuania in early July.
Sweden’s bid to join NATO remains stalled
by opposition from Turkey and Hungary, even weeks after both nations
finally approved Finland’s application. The two neighboring Nordic countries
jointly applied for NATO membership in May 2022, abandoning decades of
non-alignment in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
Austin and Jonson spoke to reporters near the docks at the
Musko Naval Base. Afterward, Austin boarded the HMS Harnosand, a Visby-class
Corvette warship, for a chilly one-hour journey north to Berga Naval Base,
passing by a number of islands in the southern Stockholm archipelago.
From aboard the ship, the U. S. defense secretary watched as
Swedish Marines on small combat boats conducted an amphibious landing exercise,
the sounds of their guns echoing off the water. Swedish fighter jets and
military Black Hawk helicopters made several passes by the ship and a Swedish
submarine nosed to the surface, identified only by its telltale periscope. Off
to the side, as his ship moved by a smaller island, explosions went off, as a
Swedish mine-clearing ship showed off its capabilities.
Austin said his visit comes at a crucial time for European
security, and he urged Turkey and NATO to act soon to approve Sweden’s
membership in NATO. He said it will mean a stronger alliance and a more secure
Europe, lauding Sweden’s troops and their capabilities, particularly in the
Baltic Sea region.
“It’s important to all of us that they make the decision
sooner versus later,” Austin said.
The U.S. agreed Monday to sell Turkey $259 million in
software it has long sought to upgrade its fleet of U.S. F-16 fighter jets. But
Turkey also still wants to buy 40 new F-16s from the U.S. — a sale opposed by
some in Congress who want to wait until Turkey approves Sweden’s membership in
NATO.
Austin is the first U.S. defense chief to visit Sweden since
William Cohen visited in 2000. While the U.S. military has long trained with
Sweden, it had not been a frequent stop for U.S. defense leaders, since they
were more likely to visit NATO allies. Sweden had long resisted joining the
alliance.
Austin got a sweeping look at Sweden’s military, including a
tour of the Musko cave complex and its maritime operations center, followed by
the sail to Berga Naval Base.
While Sweden has long worked with NATO and is considered a
“partner country,” it does not enjoy the full protections afforded a member
nation — most importantly Article 5 protection. That provision of the treaty
states that if one member of the alliance is attacked in Europe or North
America, it is considered an attack on all.
The only time the Article 5 mutual defense provision has
been invoked was in support of the U.S. after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on
New York and Washington. But after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February
2022, a number of European nations feared they could be attacked next —
triggering the NATO applications of Finland and Sweden.
Finland
formally joined the alliance on April 5, just days after Turkey and
Hungary finally voted to ratify its application. A unanimous vote of all 31
alliance members is required to admit new members.
In response to Finland’s formal acceptance, Russia’s Foreign
Ministry said Moscow “will be forced to take military-technical and other
retaliatory measures to counter the threats to our national security arising
from Finland’s accession to NATO.” And Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said
Finland’s membership reflects the alliance’s anti-Russian course and warned
that Moscow will respond depending on what weapons NATO allies place there.
The Turkish government has accused Sweden of being too soft
on groups that it deems to be terror organizations. President Recep Tayyip
Erdogan has said Ankara needs further assurances before it will give its final
approval.
The dispute grew when, in January, a far-right activist from
Denmark got police permission to stage a protest outside the Turkish Embassy in
Stockholm where he burned the Islamic holy book. The incident angered millions
of Muslims around the world, and Turkey said it wouldn’t allow Sweden to join
NATO as long as Stockholm permits such protests. In Sweden, such demonstrations
are protected by freedom of speech.
Austin spoke with Turkey’s defense minister, Hulusi Akar, on
April 6, and according to a statement from the defense ministry they discussed
Finland’s NATO membership and “it was emphasized that we always support NATO’s
Open Door Policy, Finland’s membership shows this once again and it is hoped
that Sweden will fulfill its commitments as soon as possible.”
https://apnews.com/article/sweden-us-nato-russia-war-2f260933c3c15e0957bd09b7a82129b3
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