Nicosia (Cyprus):Once again, the mercurial President of Turkey Recep Tayyip Erdogan has renewed his threats to Sweden and Finland that he would block their efforts to join the NATO alliance if they do not keep their promises they allegedly made to Ankara and has increased even more Ankara's belligerent rhetoric against NATO ally Greece.
Speaking to the Turkish Parliament last Saturday, President Erdogan said that Turkey was closely following whether the promises made by Sweden and Finland were kept or not and ominously added, "Until the promises made to our country are upheld, we will maintain our principled position. Of course, the final decision will be up to our great Parliament."
It should be noted that all 30 NATO countries must give the green light to applications by new countries to join the Alliance. So far, all NATO member states, except Hungary and Turkey, have approved or sent the membership bid of Sweden and Finland to their Parliament for ratification. The Russian invasion of Ukraine has made the two Nordic countries feel vulnerable to a possible Russian attack, and in the biggest shift in European security policy since the end of the second world war, decided to abandon their neutrality and asked to join NATO.
Last May, Turkey announced that it would block Sweden and Finland's bid to join NATO unless these two countries stop supporting Kurdish militant groups operating on their territory, speed up work on Ankara's extradition requests of PKK militants and lift all bans on weapons sales to Ankara. On June 28 before the start of a NATO summit in Madrid, a deal was reached between Turkey and the two Nordic countries, which undertook to intensify work on the extradition requests and toughen their laws concerning militants.
Despite the deal, Erdogan made it clear that Turkey could block once again the accession of Sweden and Finland by not submitting it to the Turkish Parliament for ratification if Ankara is not satisfied with the way Sweden and Finland implement the agreement. Erdogan, hoping to extract more concessions from the two countries and the NATO alliance, has once again indicated that Turkey would review the compliance of Sweden and Finland with the deal and if it is not satisfied, it would not send it to the Parliament for ratification.
This year Erdogan made serious efforts to improve Turkey's bad relations with several countries, like Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Egypt, and Israel, but with one notable exception: Greece- Ankara's supposed NATO ally but a country viewed by many Turks as a historic foe. In recent weeks Turkish Ministers and senior Army officers in a chorus have been accusing Greece of militarizing the Aegean islands close to Turkish shores, in violation of international conventions.
Turkey and Greece for decades are at loggerheads over differences concerning their respective continental shelf - and therefore their energy resources- the Turkish overflights and the status of the demilitarized islands in the Aegean as well as the Turkish invasion and continuing occupation of more than 37 percent of the island Cyprus. The two countries came to the brink of war in 1996 over an uninhabited islet.