Finland received the green light to join NATO when Turkey ratified the Nordic countryâs membership late Thursday, becoming the last country in the 30-member Western military alliance to sign off.
All NATO members must vote unanimously to admit a new country. into the alliance. The decision by the Turkish parliament followed Hungaryâs ratification of Finlandâs bid earlier in the week.
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The addition of Finland, which shares a 1,340 kilometer (832 miles) border with Russia, will more than double the size of NATOâs border with Russia.
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However, a few more steps and procedures are required before the northern European nation becomes the 31st full NATO member:
ACCEPTANCE LETTERS
Turkey and Hungary dispatch acceptance letters to the United States which is the depositary, or safekeeper, of NATO under the allianceâs 1949 founding treaty. The letters will be filed in the archives of the U.S. State Department, which will notify NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg that the conditions for inviting Finland to become a member were met.
INVITATION
NATO sends a letter signed by Stoltenberg inviting Finland to join the military alliance.
SIGNATURES
Finland sends its own acceptance document, signed by Foreign Minister Pekka Haavisto, to the U.S. State Department. Finnish President Sauli NiinistĂś authorized Haavisto to sign the document. Either the Finnish Embassy in Washington or a Finnish government official will deliver the document.
FULL MEMBERSHIP
Once Finlandâs membership acceptance document reaches the State Department in Washington, the country officially becomes a NATO member.
FINLAND-SWEDEN
Finland and neighboring Sweden jointly applied for NATO membership in May 2022. The countries, which have close cultural, economic and political ties, planned to enter the alliance simultaneously.
Swedenâs bid, however, has stalled due to opposition from Turkey, whose president has said his country wouldnât ratify membership before disputes between Ankara and Stockholm were resolved. The Turkish government has accused Sweden of being too soft on groups that it deems to be terror organizations.
Hungaryâs parliament also has yet to ratify Swedenâs accession to NATO, and it remains unclear when it will do so.