Monday February 09, 2026

Finland´s NATO membership could be ratified earlier: Turkey

Published : 20 Feb 2023, 21:26

  DF News Desk
Minister Çavuşoğlu met with U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken in Ankara on Monday. Photo: Turkish Foreign Ministry.

Turkish foreign minister Mevlut Cavusoglu on Monday reiterated that Ankara's stance on Finland's NATO accession could be different and that its membership could be ratified earlier, reported Xinhua.

He reaffirmed Ankara's demands for more Swedish steps over its security concerns despite U.S. pushes for Sweden and Finland's rapid accession into NATO.

Speaking at a joint news conference with U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken in the Turkish capital of Ankara, Mevlut Cavusoglu said Turkey is not sure about Sweden's admission into the military alliance, since it has yet to take enough steps to meet Turkey 's concerns.

Cavusoglu argued that although Sweden conveyed some positive messages, "PKK supporters are still present in Sweden. They are recruiting people; they are financing terror acts." He was speaking of the Kurdistan Workers' Party which Turkey considers a terrorist group.

The Turkish minister reiterated that Ankara's stance on Finland's accession could be different and that its membership could be ratified earlier.

Blinken, speaking earlier at the press conference, said the United States strongly supported Sweden and Finland's accession into the alliance "as quickly as possible".

"Finland and Sweden already have taken concrete steps to fulfill the commitments they made under the trilateral agreement ... We welcome those steps which are significant," Blinken added.

Cavusoglu responded that all parties in NATO must convince Sweden in particular to take more action to address Turkey 's concerns.

"If Sweden can take some positive steps then we can convince our parliament, our people and only after that we can say yes for their membership," he added.

Finland and Sweden applied to join NATO in May 2022 in the wake of the Russia´s attack on Ukraine.

Their accession to NATO needs the approval of all member states of the military alliance. Turkey and Hungary, both members of NATO, are holding back their approvals.

Turkey requests that the two Nordic countries to "speedily and thoroughly" extradite individuals it considers to be terrorist suspects.