Will Erdogan back off on veto of Sweden, Finland NATO membership at summit?
US National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan said today that President Joe Biden “may well” meet with the Turkish president on the margins of tomorrow's NATO summit.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said that he will present documents at tomorrow’s NATO summit regarding his claim that Sweden and Finland are harbouring “terrorists”, which is why he has threatened to veto their accession.
Many analysts maintain that Ankara has been essentially blackmailing the Alliance with the threat of a veto in order to exact concessions from the US, which has blocked arms sales to Turkey (including 40 F-16 fighter jets). At the same time he is reportedly preparing to discuss the procurement of Eurofighter war planes from the UK.
The ‘documents’
Erdogan for now is underlining that he is not going to back off on his threat to veto the NATO membership applications of Sweden and Finland unless they extradite to Turkey members of the Kurdish PKK, the YPG (its Syrian branch) and of FETO (the organisation of his arch-enemy Fetullah Gulen, which he has also labelled a terrorist organisation as he alleges it was behind the 2016 abortive coup against him) and claims that the documents he will table at tomorrow’s summit concern “confronting terrorism”
Over the last five years the two countries have rejected most of Ankara’s extradition requests.
Erdogan has said that the two countries must cease their alleged “political, financial, and military support” for terrorist groups.
NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg, Erdogan, and the leaders of Sweden and Finland are to hold four-ways talks before the start of the summit tomorrow in a bid to strike a deal.
US National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan said today that President Joe Biden “may well” meet with Erdogan on the margins of the summit as well.
Sweden, Finland seek conciliation
Swedish Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson and Finnish President Sauli Niinisto have attempted to adopt a conciliatory stance with Erdogan without caving in to all his demands.
Erdogan has asked Andersson to lift an arms embargo imposed on Turkey after its attacks in Syria in 2019 against the Kurdish People’s Defense Units (YPG).
In late May, Andersson said after a telephone conversation with Erdogan that, “I emphasized that Sweden welcomes the possibility of cooperation in the fight against international terrorism and emphasized that Sweden clearly supports the fight against terrorism and the terrorist listing of the PKK.»
Threats against Greece
On 26 June, in a reference to Greece after a cabinet meeting, Erdogan said that, “We did not hesitate and will not hesitate to take all the necessary steps in the Mediterranean and the Aegean.”
He asserted that the recent, large multi-national EFES military exercises sent “a message of trust to friends and of fear to foes”.
Unclear whether Erdogan will demand demilitarisation of islands
Erdogan did not say whether he will raise at the NATO summit his persistent demands that Greece demilitarise a number of its Eastern Aegean islands, although the pro-government Turkish press has reported that he plans to do so.
Meanwhile, Erdogan is reportedly mulling the prospect of procuring from the UK used Eurofighter Typhoon war planes, in order to strike a balance with the French Rafales bought by Greece.
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