Sweden will send diplomats to Turkey to try to overcome Ankara's objections to its plan to join Nato, Defence Minister Peter Hultqvist said, with a formal decision to hand in an application expected tomorrow.
Sweden's ruling Social Democrats dropped their 73-year opposition to joining Nato today and are hoping for a quick accession, abandoning decades of military non-alignment following Russia's February 24 invasion of Ukraine.
Finland today also confirmed it would apply to join the Atlantic military alliance.
However, Turkey surprised its Nato allies by saying it would not view applications by Finland and Sweden positively, with President Tayyip Erdogan saying, "Scandinavian countries are guesthouses for terrorist organisations".
"We will send a group of diplomats to hold discussions and have a dialogue with Turkey so we can see how this can be resolved and what this is really about," Defence Minister Peter Hultqvist told public service broadcaster SVT.
Turkey said it wanted the Nordic countries to halt support for Kurdish militant groups present on their territory, and lift bans on sales of some weapons to Turkey.
Nato and the United States said they were confident Turkey would not hold up membership of Finland and Sweden.
Any decision on Nato enlargement requires approval by all 30 members of the alliance and their parliaments, but diplomats said Erdogan would be under pressure to yield as Finland and Sweden would greatly strengthen Nato in the Baltic Sea.
"I'm confident that we will be able to address the concerns that Turkey has expressed in a way that doesn't delay the membership," NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said on Sunday.
Sweden's parliament will hold a debate on Sweden's membership application tomorrow, a formality as there is already a broad majority for an application. The government will take the formal decision to apply later in the day, Hultqvist said.
-Reuters