
NATO Membership: Turkey Clears Finland, Sweden Still Vetoed
Ratification is expected before the Turkish parliament goes into recess in mid-April, bringing Finland one step closer to NATO membership.

Ratification is expected before the Turkish parliament goes into recess in mid-April, bringing Finland one step closer to NATO membership.

After meeting the Finnish President, Erdoğan will likely ratify Finland’s application within a month. Sweden, however, will probably have to wait until after May’s elections.

As rising gang crime sparks debates over law, order, and immigration ahead of Finland’s election, national-conservative True Finns say they “have been warning for years” of the danger.

True Finns’ rising popularity is important both for Finland’s upcoming elections on April 2nd, and—perhaps more importantly—for challenging the progressive narrative of the ‘liberal youth.’

The interspersed fencing will reach between 130 and 260 kilometres in length and will include surveillance systems.

While the move to join NATO without Sweden has overwhelming support and has been long anticipated, there are still some doubts being raised over the decision.

With Sweden deadlocked in its NATO bid, mixed signals are now coming out of Finland, in spite of an official stance of solidarity.

President Erdoğan has so far blocked both countries’ bids and is using his vetoes as political leverage in an attempt to get Sweden and Finland to meet his demands.

It was exactly one year ago, on a cold, dark winter evening in January 2022, when Paul Coleman arrived in Helsinki for the modern-day heresy trial of Finnish MP Dr. Päivi Räsänen and Bishop Juhana Pohjola.

Finnish Foreign Minister Pekka Haavisto pointed out that every aid package depletes the military resources of the giving country.