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Hungary approves Sweden’s NATO bid, unblocking historic expansion

cigaretteman

HR King
May 29, 2001
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Hungary’s parliament on Monday voted in favor of Sweden’s long-delayed bid to join NATO, clearing the final obstacle to a historic expansion of the military alliance and putting an end to an uncomfortable standoff between its members.

With Budapest at last on board, Sweden is set to become NATO’s 32nd member, possibly within the week, completing a process that began with Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine and saw Finland join last year. The addition of the two Nordic countries will bolster the alliance’s capabilities, strengthening its position in the high north and the Black Sea — all while sending an important message to Moscow.

Four maps explain how Sweden and Finland could alter NATO’s security
“Today is a historic day,” Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson wrote on X, formerly Twitter. “The parliaments of all NATO member states have now voted in favour of Swedish accession to NATO. Sweden stands ready to shoulder its responsibility for Euro-Atlantic security.”
NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg welcomed Hungary’s vote, saying, “Sweden’s membership will make us all stronger and safer.”

NATO map. (The Washington Post)
While the alliance is indeed bigger than ever and stronger than it’s been in years, many months of obstruction from Turkey, followed by continued delays by Hungary, spotlighted the challenge of keeping allies together, even in the face of an aggressive, revanchist Russia.



The ratification in Budapest comes at a moment when NATO allies are struggling to stay united on aid for Ukraine and the alliance is trying to project confidence despite concern about remarks from the former — and potential future — president Donald Trump.
So, when allies finally gather at NATO headquarters in Brussels to raise the Swedish flag, there will be celebration, certainly, but also exhausted sighs of relief.
After the signing of the Hungarian ratification document, just a few formalities will remain. NATO officials and diplomats said the alliance will try to move fast, ideally formalizing membership by the end of the week, though it could take longer.

The expansion of the NATO alliance is a tangible sign of the changes wrought by Russia’s war in Ukraine. In the aftermath of Russia’s full-scale invasion, Finland and Sweden abandoned years of military nonalignment to seek security in within NATO. Their joining required unanimous support from all the other member countries.
Finland joins NATO, doubling alliance’s land border with Russia
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, Putin’s closest ally in the European Union, had said he would not be the last holdout. But on Sweden’s bid, he was.


His main stated objection was to comments from Swedish officials about the erosion of democracy in Hungary.

His demand list wasn’t nearly as long or detailed as that of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, who sought F-16 fighter jets from the United States and the lifting of arms embargoes by multiple countries, while also insisting that Sweden crack down on groups Turkey considers to be terrorists and prohibit the burning of the Quran at protests.

Even after the Turkish parliament ratified Sweden’s membership in January, concluding 20 months of back-and-forth, Orban maintained that Sweden joining NATO was a matter to be negotiated.
Turkey votes in favor of Sweden’s NATO membership after months of delay
He pressured the Swedish prime minister to visit him in Budapest — and wasn’t content to meet on the sidelines of a European Union summit in Brussels.
Eventually Kristersson agreed, and on Friday, in the Hungarian capital, the two signed a deal to expand Budapest’s fleet of Swedish-built fighter jets.


Orban cast the deal as part of a process to repair damaged trust.
“To be a member of NATO together with another country means that we are ready to die for each other,” he said. “So if you would like to make that kind of strong relationship, you need the proper basis for that, especially trust and mutual respect.”

He reflected that Hungary’s slowness in agreeing to Sweden’s NATO membership was “cautious and proper preparation,” conducted at the right pace.
Addressing parliament before the vote on Monday, Orban spoke in favor of Sweden joining NATO. He also talked about Hungary having had a long and controversial relationship with the countries of Scandinavia — and how outsiders trying to intervene in those disputes have hindered their resolution.
Orban was on the defensive throughout his remarks. Although his party dominates the country’s politics, it has been shaken by scandal this month. President Katalin Novák resigned under pressure for pardoning a man convicted of helping to cover up sexual abuse in a children’s home. Lawmakers were also voting Monday on the election of a new president, Tamás Sulyok.



 
Europe - and I'm including Orban's change of heart on this - is suddenly waking up to the fact of a de facto US withdrawal from NATO and abandonment of Europe if Trump wins in November.

One of Trump's very last acts after losing the election was to attempt to order a full withdrawal of all troops from Germany after starting the draw down earlier that year, undoubtedly on Putin's orders.

 
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Reactions: h-hawk
Uneasy alliance at best. The OP's article illustrates as much.

Does anyone really think that Turkey and Hungary will come to the defense of the Nordic countries?

We all need to start being honest with one another.
 
Uneasy alliance at best. The OP's article illustrates as much.

Does anyone really think that Turkey and Hungary will come to the defense of the Nordic countries?

We all need to start being honest with one another.
Perhaps; but most will from north and Western Europe. The idea is to present this as a deterrent to Putin.

Hungary did just sign off so I’d have to say they are a Yes at the moment.
 
Then it's not irony
Why not? Part of why Putin said he was invading Ukraine was because he supposedly want to stop them and by extension others from joining NATO. None of these countries were considering or at best were nowhere near final approval if they were.

By invading Ukraine; he has created the very future he sought to prevent.
 
Why not? Part of why Putin said he was invading Ukraine was because he supposedly want to stop them and by extension others from joining NATO. None of these countries were considering or at best were nowhere near final approval if they were.

By invading Ukraine; he has created the very future he sought to prevent.
Yup, just another sign that he has already lost.
 
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