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Macron approves NATO enlargement

More than two thirds of the alliance’s members have now agreed to Finland and Sweden’s accessionMacron approves NATO enlargement

Macron approves NATO enlargement

FILE PHOTO: Emmanuel Macron addresses a joint press conference with Beninese President Patrice Talon at the Marina palace in Cotonou, Benin, July 27, 2022 © AFP / Ludovic Marin

French President Emmanuel Macron on Saturday signed the official documents approving Finland and Sweden’s applications to become NATO members. While Macron once called the US-led military bloc “brain dead,” he has switched tack since Russia launched its military operation in Ukraine. 

France’s parliament approved the enlargement proposal earlier this month, after the two Nordic nations applied to join the alliance in May. By petitioning the Western bloc for membership, both renounced their prior non-alignment, with Finland officially neutral since shortly after World War II and Sweden since the early 19th Century.

“This sovereign choice of Finland and Sweden, two European partners, will make it possible to strengthen their security in the face of the current threat in their immediate neighborhood,” read a statement from the Elysee Palace cited by AFP, with the “threat” in question presumably referencing Russia. 

Russia labels France ‘unfriendly’ state

Russia labels France ‘unfriendly’ state

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Russia labels France ‘unfriendly’ state

While Moscow warned Sweden and Finland in May of “serious military and political consequences” should they go through with their bid for NATO membership, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said that as Russia has no territorial disputes with either state, Moscow is relatively unperturbed by the prospect.

By contrast, Russia has for decades described the prospect of a NATO-aligned Ukraine as an unacceptable security threat, ultimately sending troops into the country partly in an effort to prevent this outcome. If Ukraine had joined the alliance, its territorial claim over Crimea – which voted to join the Russian Federation in 2014 – could have brought NATO into direct conflict with Russia.

All of NATO’s 30 members must ratify new additions to the alliance. Turkey threatened in May to veto Finland and Sweden’s membership bids, citing the alleged support of Stockholm and Helsinki for Kurds that Ankara considers terrorists. A tentative deal between Turkey and the Nordics have apparently been reached, with Sweden on Thursday announcing the extradition of a Turkish national to his home country. It is unclear whether the suspect was among a list of alleged terrorists wanted by Ankara.

Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu stated on Thursday that his government would meet with Finnish and Swedish officials later this month to further discuss the two states’ NATO applications.

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More than 20 of NATO’s 30 members have now ratified Finland and Sweden’s applications, with US President Joe Biden signing the official documents on Tuesday.

Macron’s signature comes three years after he described the Cold War-era alliance as “brain dead,” and suggested that the EU look after its own defense needs with a common European army. However, Macron has since shifted his position, describing the conflict in Ukraine as an “electroshock of awakening” for NATO. 

The French president, however, has shied away from some of the harsher anti-Russian rhetoric of his NATO allies. Although France has backed successive rounds of EU sanctions and sent arms to Ukraine, Macron told a French documentary crew in June that his goal is  to “help Ukraine to win…not to fight against Russia, let alone annihilate it,” as he said that “Anglo Saxon” leaders want to do.

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