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by Ronald Suny | Professor - University of Michigan Ann Arbor MI (SPX) May 19, 2022
After decades of neutrality, the two Nordic states that have to date remained out of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization have reacted to Russia's invasion of Ukraine by declaring an intention to join the American-led alliance. But there is a major obstacle in their way: Turkey. The increasingly autocratic and anti-democratic president of Turkey, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, has said he will not agree to the entry of these two countries. And as a member of NATO, Turkey's approval is needed for Finland and Sweden to join. Erdogan is alone among NATO leaders in publicly stating that he is against the two countries' joining the alliance.
Harboring terrorists or grudges? Despite the PKK's being listed by the U.S. and EU as a terrorist group, Finland and Sweden have been reluctant to extradite members of the group to Turkey over human rights concerns. Erdogan has responded by calling Sweden a "hatchery" for terrorism and claiming neither country has "a clear, open attitude" toward terrorist organizations, adding: "How can we trust them?" Erdogan's ire with Finland and Sweden has also been exacerbated by the country hosting followers of Turkish scholar and cleric Fethullah Gulen. These followers are part of an educational and political movement with which Erdogan had been allied, but with which he broke as it grew more powerful. The Turkish president accuses the Gulenists of staging a failed coup against his government in 2016.
All international politics is local Foreign policy is almost always intimately tied to domestic concerns. In the case of Turkey's government, a major fear is the threat to its grip on power posed by the Kurds - and international pressure over Turkey's record of repressing the group. Turkey's Kurdish populations are not allowed free elections in the eastern Anatolian region, where they are the majority. Meanwhile, education and cultural institutions in the Kurdish language face a de facto ban.
The path ahead for NATO Meanwhile, NATO countries have equivocated before their fellow member, agreeing to label the PKK a terrorist organization. So where does this all leave Finland and Sweden's application for NATO membership? The rules for entry into the strategic alliance require unanimity of the current NATO members. As such, Turkey can effectively veto the entry of Finland and Sweden. The standoff highlights an underlying problem the alliance is facing. NATO is supposed to be an alliance of democratic countries. Yet several of its members - notably Turkey and Hungary - have moved steadily away from liberal democracy toward ethnonational populist authoritarianism. Finland and Sweden, on the other hand, fulfill the parameters of NATO membership more clearly than several of the alliance's current members. As the United States proclaims that the war in Ukraine is a struggle between democracy and autocracy, Turkey's opposition to the Nordics who have protested its drift to illiberalism are testing the unity and the ideological coherence of NATO.
NATO or Not? How Best to Protect Sweden Fairfield IA (SPX) May 19, 2022 Europe is in turmoil. The world has been shaken. Uncertainty pervades the globe in the face of the Russian incursion into Ukraine. As a result, despite its long-held tradition of neutrality, Sweden may soon seek NATO protection. But whether or not Sweden decides to join NATO, a wise course of action would be for Sweden to quickly adopt Invincible Defense Technology (IDT) to achieve the desired goals of national security and peace. IDT is a systematic, reliable, effective way to create peace throug ... read more
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