LATEST: Turkey Unblocks Sweden NATO Bid During 11th Hour Talks, Setting Stage For Summit
NATO's efforts to present a united front at a summit focused on helping Ukraine defeat Russia and Kyiv's push to join the alliance were undermined Monday by a shock Turkish ultimatum on Sweden's membership bid.
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As Ukraine's forces claimed more advances against Russian positions, NATO's 31 members agreed to simplify Kyiv's eventual accession bid by dropping a requirement that it complete a formal road map of reforms.
Alliance leaders gathering in Vilnius on the eve of Tuesday's summit were hoping a meeting between Erdogan and Sweden's Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson would see the Turkish leader lift his veto on Sweden's membership.
But President Recep Tayyip Erdogan appeared in no mood to compromise, declaring that he would only back Sweden's NATO candidacy if European Union members – most of whom are also NATO allies – agree to revive Turkey's negotiations to join the EU.
The demand, never before made in public, threatened to open a new rift between Ankara and its Western partners, even as NATO and the EU tackle Russia's invasion of Ukraine, the continent's worst security crisis since World War II.
"Almost all the NATO members are EU members. I now am addressing these countries, which are making Turkey wait for more than 50 years," Erdogan said, before boarding his flight for the Lithuanian capital.
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"First, open the way to Turkey's membership of the European Union, and then we will open it for Sweden, just as we had opened it for Finland."
Germany's Chancellor Olaf Scholz, a powerful figure in both NATO and the EU, was quick to stress there was no link between Sweden's bid and Turkey's EU application, which was formally launched in 2005 but has stalled.
"Sweden meets all the requirements for NATO membership," he said in Berlin.
"The other question is one that is not connected with it and that is why I do not think it should be seen as a connected issue."
NATO secretary general Jens Stoltenberg also expressed caution, recalling that at previous NATO talks in Madrid, Turkey had agreed a set of conditions for Swedish membership that made no mention of EU membership.
"It's still possible to have a positive decision on Swedish membership here in Vilnius,"
Stoltenberg said, at an appearance with Lithuania's President Gitanas Nauseda.
"We don't have any certainty, we don't have any guarantees, but of course now we have the momentum of the summit with the leaders here and we will use that momentum to ensure as much progress as possible."
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