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June 14, 2023
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Image President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Ankara, Turkey, in June. Credit... Burak Kara/Getty Images

ISTANBUL — Amid high-level talks on Wednesday aimed at bridging differences over Sweden’s application to join NATO, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey showed little sign publicly of easing his opposition to the Nordic nation’s membership, a dispute that has strained his ties with Western allies amid the war in Ukraine.

The talks between Mr. Erdogan and senior officials from Finland, Sweden and NATO were the first since the Turkish president secured re-election last month, and Turkey’s allies were watching closely for any signs that Mr. Erdogan’s position on Sweden’s application — which he has so far blocked — has changed.

The meeting ended in the afternoon without an immediate statement. Mr. Erdogan was expected to address his cabinet later on Wednesday, though it was not clear whether he would address Sweden’s NATO bid. In comments published in the Turkish news media on Wednesday as the meeting began, however, Mr. Erdogan said that Sweden should expect no change in Turkey’s position as long as pro-Kurdish protests continued to be held in the Swedish capital, Stockholm.

Turkey wants a tougher stance toward pro-Kurdish activists and members of an outlawed religious group whom Turkey considers terrorists. “This is not a constitutional matter, not a legal matter,” Mr. Erdogan told Turkish reporters on a flight returning from Azerbaijan on Tuesday, referring to steps Sweden had taken to address Turkey’s concerns. “What is the use of law enforcement?” Sweden and Finland both applied to join NATO after Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine began in February last year, but Turkey has hobbled the expansion process, accusing the two Nordic nations of not taking Turkey’s security concerns seriously. In April, Turkey allowed Finland to join NATO, but it has so far refused to do the same for Sweden, accusing it of not meeting Turkey’s demands. Finland and Sweden have amended their terrorism legislation and a small number of people accused of crimes in Turkey have been extradited, but many fewer than Turkey has asked for. Hungary is the only other NATO member that has not allowed Sweden to join. New members of the alliance must be accepted by all members. Mr. Erdogan’s critics have accused him of taking advantage of NATO’s rules for domestic political benefit. Last week, NATO’s secretary general, Jens Stoltenberg, renewed his call for Turkey to let Sweden join the alliance after failing to reach a breakthrough in talks in Istanbul. “Sweden has fulfilled its obligations,” Mr. Stoltenberg said, adding that it had lifted an arms embargo on Turkey, strengthened its antiterrorism legislation and amended its constitution. President Biden said that he had raised the issue with Mr. Erdogan during a call last month to congratulate him on his presidential victory. “I told him we wanted a deal with Sweden, so let’s get that done,” Mr. Biden told reporters at the White House. Some analysts said that Mr. Erdogan held up NATO expansion to show his power on the world stage, as a way of appealing to nationalist voters in the run-up to the election. But before his comments published on Wednesday, he had said little about the issue since his victory on May 28. Also attending Wednesday’s meeting are Akif Cagatay Kilic, an adviser to Mr. Erdogan; Stian Jenssen, the director of the private office of the NATO secretary general; Jan Knutsson, the state secretary of foreign affairs of Sweden; and Jukka Salovaara, the permanent state secretary of foreign affairs for Finland. The meeting, in the Turkish capital, Ankara, is the latest of a so-called permanent joint mechanism set up to address Turkey’s concerns about Finland and Sweden. The group last met in March at the NATO headquarters in Brussels.

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Source: The New York Times