Nato secretary general says alliance will make the new
member safer
April 4, 2023
Finland will join Nato on Tuesday after a
swift accession process following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
“We will raise
the Finnish flag for the first time here at Nato headquarters,” said Jens Stoltenberg,
the secretary general. “It will be a good day for Finland’s security, for
Nordic security and for Nato as a whole.”
Moscow immediately responded by pledging to boost troop numbers
in its western and northwestern regions.
Finland has a
1,300km (810 miles) border with Russia, meaning Nato’s direct frontier with
Russia will roughly double in length.
President Sauli
Niinisto will travel to Brussels to take part in Tuesday’s ceremony as his
nation becomes the 31st member of the alliance.
Its membership,
first sought in May last year, was ratified by Turkey last week, lifting the
last hurdle to accession. Tuesday will mark the first enlargement of the
defence bloc since North Macedonia joined in 2020.
Responding to Finland’s accession, Russian deputy foreign
minister Alexander Grushko said Russia would strengthen its military capacity
in its western and northwestern regions, according to the state-owned news
agency RIA.
Mr Stoltenberg
said: “President Putin went to war against Ukraine with the clear aim to get
less Nato. He’s getting the exact opposite.”
Sweden’s bid to
join has stalled due to opposition from Turkey, whose president has said his
country would not ratify membership before disputes between Ankara and
Stockholm were resolved. President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s government has
accused Sweden of being too soft on groups that it deems to be terror
organisations.
Hungary’s
parliament also has yet to ratify Sweden’s accession to Nato, and it remains
unclear when it will do so.
It comes just a
day after Finland’s prime minister Sanna Marin conceded
defeat in a tight election for parliament, denying her a second
term in office.
Petteri Orpo’s
centre-right National Coalition Party claimed victory on Sunday evening with
around 97.7 per cent of the votes counted, coming out on top at 20.7 per cent.
The right-wing
populist party The Finns won 20.1 per cent and Ms Marin’s Social Democrats 19.9
per cent.
Mr Orpo’s party, which has advocated Nato membership for two
decades, will need to make firm commitments on military spending to meet a Nato
target of 2 per cent of a member nation’s GDP being spent on defence.
With
additional reporting from the Associated Press
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/finland-nato-join-membership-finnish-b2313103.html
https://news.sky.com/story/finland-to-officially-join-nato-on-tuesday-12849033
👍 Congratulations!
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