Biden thanks Turkey’s Erdogan for decision over Sweden’s Nato entry, backs F-16s sale

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan (left) and US President Joe Biden at the Nato summit in Vilnius, Lithuania. PHOTO: NYTIMES

VILNIUS - United States President Joe Biden thanked his Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Tuesday for his “courage” in dropping opposition to Sweden’s entry to Nato.

At a meeting during the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation summit in Lithuanian capital Vilnius, Mr Biden celebrated the conclusion of a major diplomatic push to get Mr Erdogan to stop blocking Sweden’s application.

“I want to thank you for your diplomacy and your courage to take that on. And I want to thank you for your leadership,” Mr Biden told Mr Erdogan.

Frustration had been mounting in Western capitals at Mr Erdogan’s obstruction of Sweden, which required unanimous approval from Nato members in order to complete its entry bid into the alliance.

Sweden and Finland applied for Nato membership in response to the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

Mr Biden spoke with Mr Erdogan from the US presidential Air Force One plane for nearly an hour on Sunday in a bid to break the impasse and avoid an embarrassing failure at the Vilnius summit.

Mr Erdogan abruptly dropped his opposition late on Monday on the eve of the Nato get-together.

For months, Mr Erdogan insisted on a crackdown in Sweden against members of Kurdish movements outlawed in Turkey, something the Swedish government says it has now done.

But speculation mounted over what other concessions Turkey extracted to give its green light.

Mr Erdogan had demanded at the last minute that approval for Sweden in Nato would depend on Turkey being able to renew stalled membership talks with the European Union.

Another longstanding demand from Turkey for the purchase of modern US F-16 fighter jets seemed to get a boost in the wake of the decision on Sweden.

Mr Biden’s national security adviser, Mr Jake Sullivan, stressed on Tuesday that the US President has “been clear and unequivocal for months that he’s supported the transfer of F-16s”, seeing this as in the interests of Nato.

“He has placed no caveats or conditions on that in his public and private comments over the past few months. And he intends to move forward with that transfer in consultation with Congress.”

A US official told AFP that the White House is now “actively engaging” with Congress, where there has been significant opposition to allowing the sale.

Mr Sullivan said “we will work with the Congress on the appropriate timing for getting” the warplanes to Turkey. But he could not “speculate on the precise day it’s going to happen”.

Although Nato secretary-general Jens Stoltenberg and Sweden’s Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson were heavily engaged in the negotiations with Mr Erdogan, Mr Sullivan stressed “significant recent” US involvement.

As for the effort by Mr Erdogan to link Turkey’s EU aspirations with the Swedish-Nato question, Mr Sullivan said Mr Biden has “long” supported Turkey entering the bloc.

However, that would take “discussions of the necessary reforms and steps relative to democratic resilience that every prospective applicant to the European Union goes through”.

“So, as far as we’re concerned, these issues are not connected,” he said. AFP

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