STOCKHOLM: Hungary’s parliament approved Sweden’s NATO accession, clearing the last hurdle before the historic step by the Nordic country whose neutrality lasted through two world wars and the simmering conflict of the Cold War.
Hungary’s vote ended months of delays in completing Sweden’s security policy shift and followed a visit by Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson on Friday, during which the two countries signed an arms deal.
“Sweden is leaving 200 years of neutrality and military non-alignment behind,” Kristersson told a press conference.
“We are joining NATO to defend what we are and everything we believe in even better. We are defending our freedom, our democracy and our values, together with others.”
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s government has faced pressure from NATO allies to fall in line and seal Sweden’s accession to the alliance.
“We would like to welcome Sweden alongside Finland into the NATO alliance very, very soon,” said White House spokesperson Karine Jean-Pierre.
She encouraged Hungary’s government to quickly complete the process to allow Sweden’s entry into NATO.
“Sweden’s membership will make us all stronger and safer,” NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said on X.
Read more: Hungary buys Swedish fighter jets, prepares to approve NATO bid
Stockholm abandoned its non-alignment policy for greater safety within the North Atlantic Treaty Organization after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
With Sweden following Finland into NATO, Russian President Vladimir Putin has in effect achieved the very thing he sought to avert when he launched his war in Ukraine – an expansion of the alliance, Western leaders have said.
“When it comes to Russia, the only thing we can expect is that they will not like that Sweden is becoming a NATO member,” Kristersson said. “What they do in addition to that, we cannot know. We are prepared for all sorts of things.”
The accession of Sweden, which has not been at war since 1814, and Finland is the most significant expansion of the alliance since it took in members from eastern Europe after the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991.
While Sweden has increased cooperation with NATO in recent decades, contributing to operations in places such as Afghanistan, its membership is set to simplify defence planning and cooperation on the alliance’s northern flank.
“NATO gains a member that is serious and capable and it removes a factor of uncertainty in Northern Europe,” said Robert Dalsjo, senior analyst at the Swedish Defence Research Agency, a government think tank.